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JournalISSN: 1477-4739

Journal of The Communications Network 

About: Journal of The Communications Network is an academic journal. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Software deployment & Smart grid. Over the lifetime, 8 publications have been published receiving 349 citations.

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Journal Article
TL;DR: Insight is provided into the potential applications of ad hoc networks and the technological challenges that protocol designers and network developers are faced with, which include routing, service and resource discovery, Internet connectivity, billing and security.
Abstract: In the past few years, we have seen a rapid expansion in the field of mobile computing due to the proliferation of inexpensive, widely available wireless devices. However, current devices, applications and protocols are solely focused on cellular or wireless local area networks (WLANs), not taking into account the great potential offered by mobile ad hoc networking. A mobile ad hoc network is an autonomous collection of mobile devices (laptops, smart phones, sensors, etc.) that communicate with each other over wireless links and cooperate in a distributed manner in order to provide the necessary network functionality in the absence of a fixed infrastructure. This type of network, operating as a stand-alone network or with one or multiple points of attachment to cellular networks or the Internet, paves the way for numerous new and exciting applications. Application scenarios include, but are not limited to: emergency and rescue operations, conference or campus settings, car networks, personal networking, etc. This paper provides insight into the potential applications of ad hoc networks and discusses the technological challenges that protocol designers and network developers are faced with. These challenges include routing, service and resource discovery, Internet connectivity, billing and security.

299 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: This paper discusses the major issues related to broadband wireless communication in vehicles, with special emphasis on the handover protocols and smart antennas and their influence on the quality of service (QoS) of the offered services.
Abstract: Authors Tom Van Leeuwen, Ingrid Moerman, Hendrik Rogier, Bart Dhoedt, Daniel De Zutter, Piet Demeester Ghent University, Belgium Contact: Ingrid Moerman Department of Information Technology (INTEC), Ghent University – IMEC, Sint Pietersnieuwstraat 41 B-9000 Ghent, Belgium. Tel: +32 9 267 35 73 Fax: +32 9 267 35 99 Email: ingrid.moerman@intec.rug.ac.be Today our society is struggling more and more with environmental and economical problems related to the ever-increasing traffic on our highways and in our cities. The resulting traffic jams give rise to waste of time and money and are polluting our environment at a rapid pace. As a result, carpooling and public transport will be strongly encouraged by governments and industry. In order to make this more attractive to the frequent commuter, novel technologies for providing virtual offices or virtual homes in vehicles need to be developed. In order to provide high-bit-rate interactive multimedia services to fast-moving mobile users, one has to reuse the limited radio spectrum as efficiently as possible. This is made possible by using a cellular network with very small cells resulting in a high reuse factor of the frequency spectrum. This will result however in frequent handovers (typically every few seconds) because mobile devices may move very fast, crossing many cell boundaries. This paper discusses the major issues related to broadband wireless communication in vehicles, with special emphasis on the handover protocols and smart antennas and their influence on the quality of service (QoS) of the offered services.

17 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: Technologies and architectures to allow secure remote management of home devices by service and/or access providers are addressed.
Abstract: The advent of novel terminals accompanied with advanced gateways and network devices has enormous potential when it comes to delivering innovative interactive services to broad audiences. This evolution however comes with its own dangers: the increased complexity to consistently configure terminals and network elements goes far beyond the capabilities of the average user and could even become the limiting factor for the ongoing broadband adoption. As a solution to this complexity issue, this paper addresses technologies and architectures to allow secure remote management of home devices by service and/or access providers.

16 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: A new way of capturing the future technical infrastructure of a converged fixed-mobile infrastructure by means of a four-tiered hierarchy of one fixed and three different mobile and wireless (access) layers is presented.
Abstract: We present a new way of capturing the future technical infrastructure of a converged fixed-mobile infrastructure by means of a four-tiered hierarchy of one fixed and three different mobile and wireless (access) layers. With such a view, the current range of heterogeneous interconnected public and private networks can be easily modelled as a landscape of pockets (the mobile/wireless networks) with various depths and widths, connected by a drainage of high capacity (the fixed network) in which marbles (information) find their way. The metaphor clearly illustrates that higher demand for mobility will increase the need for a densely distributed high-capacity fixed access network. It also shows the high potential of the relatively new concept of personal networking. In the light of this model, we describe crucial technologies for fixed-mobile convergence, such as handover, roaming, and gateways. Summarising, we believe that our contribution in this paper could prove to be a helpful guideline to the telecom industry both from a strategic and operational perspective.

15 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: An overview of current grid systems, application taxonomy and emerging trends is discussed, taking current grid deployments as a starting point and the implications for the network are analysed.
Abstract: Contact details for authors: Bruno Volckaert Department of Information Technology (INTEC) Ghent University, Sint-Pietersnieuwstraat 41, B-9000 Gent (Belgium) Tel: +32 (0) 9 264 9964 Email: Bruno.Volckaert@intec.UGent.be For the past five years, grid computing has been a very hot and fruitful research theme resulting now in the deployment of the first operational grid systems. The main motivation for this new computing paradigm lies in the observation that the demand for computational and storage resources is ever growing while on the other hand vast resources remain underused. The grid paradigm aims at solving this mismatch by offering its users computational and storage resources transparently, making abstraction of the exact geographic location of the physical resource (this approach has appealing similarities to the power grid, hence the term grid computing). Despite the current deployment of operational grid systems, important challenges still lie ahead. New applications, opening the grid also for commercial exploitation, impose new requirements in terms of, for example, security, scaling behaviour, quality of service and robustness. In particular the geographic spread of grid users in combination with these new requirements will certainly have drastic consequences for the communication infrastructure. This paper discusses an overview of current grid systems, application taxonomy and emerging trends. The implications for the network are analysed, taking current grid deployments as a starting point. The importance of co-management of computational/ storage and network resources is illustrated.

10 citations

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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
20071
20061
20052
20043
20031